TY - JOUR T1 - Thinking Outside the Box: Rectilinear Shapes Selectively Activate Scene-Selective Cortex JF - The Journal of Neuroscience JO - J. Neurosci. SP - 6721 LP - 6735 DO - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4802-13.2014 VL - 34 IS - 20 AU - Shahin Nasr AU - Cesar E. Echavarria AU - Roger B.H. Tootell Y1 - 2014/05/14 UR - http://www.jneurosci.org/content/34/20/6721.abstract N2 - Fifteen years ago, an intriguing area was found in human visual cortex. This area (the parahippocampal place area [PPA]) was initially interpreted as responding selectively to images of places. However, subsequent studies reported that PPA also responds strongly to a much wider range of image categories, including inanimate objects, tools, spatial context, landmarks, objectively large objects, indoor scenes, and/or isolated buildings. Here, we hypothesized that PPA responds selectively to a lower-level stimulus property (rectilinear features), which are common to many of the above higher-order categories. Using a novel wavelet image filter, we first demonstrated that rectangular features are common in these diverse stimulus categories. Then we tested whether PPA is selectively activated by rectangular features in six independent fMRI experiments using progressively simplified stimuli, from complex real-world images, through 3D/2D computer-generated shapes, through simple line stimuli. We found that PPA was consistently activated by rectilinear features, compared with curved and nonrectangular features. This rectilinear preference was (1) comparable in amplitude and selectivity, relative to the preference for category (scenes vs faces), (2) independent of known biases for specific orientations and spatial frequency, and (3) not predictable from V1 activity. Two additional scene-responsive areas were sensitive to a subset of rectilinear features. Thus, rectilinear selectivity may serve as a crucial building block for category-selective responses in PPA and functionally related areas. ER -